economy

Oil Whiplash: WTI Crashes to $95, Rebounds to $101 in 24 Hours

Chip MorenoChip Moreno
··1 min read
AdEcuaPass

GET YOUR ECUADOR VISA HANDLED BY EXPERTS

Trusted by 2,000+ expats • Retirement • Professional • Investor visas

Free Quote

What Happened

April 8: WTI crude oil dropped more than 15% to approximately $95/barrel after President Trump announced a two-week postponement of his threatened strikes on Iranian civilian infrastructure (source). Markets interpreted the delay as de-escalation.

April 9: WTI rebounded 7.28% to $101.28/barrel (source) as traders reassessed the postponement as a pause rather than a resolution. The Strait of Hormuz remains disrupted.

A $6+ swing in 24 hours is extreme volatility by any measure.

Ecuador's Dual Exposure

Export Revenue (Benefits from High Prices)

Ecuador produces approximately 470,000 barrels/day, most exported as Oriente blend. At $100+ WTI:

  • Government oil revenue significantly exceeds the $65-70/bbl fiscal framework assumption
  • IMF program targets become easier to meet
  • The fiscal deficit narrows

Consumer Fuel Prices (Hurt by High Prices)

Ecuador's fuel band system passes international oil prices to consumers, capped at 5%/month:

  • Extra/Ecopaís heading to $3.03/gallon on April 12 (source)
  • Diesel projected at $2.96/gallon
  • Transport, food, and delivery costs follow with a 2-4 week lag

What This Means for Expats

  • Your fuel costs are going up regardless of day-to-day volatility. The April 12 adjustment is based on the monthly average, not single-day prices. One crash day doesn't save you
  • Ecuador's government is doing well financially from high oil — which means better-funded services, security operations, and infrastructure
  • The geopolitical risk remains. Trump postponed, not cancelled. If the Iran situation escalates again, oil could spike further. If it resolves, prices could drop significantly — and fuel prices would follow with a one-month lag
  • Dollarization insulates you from currency effects but not from local price inflation driven by fuel costs

Sources: FX Daily Report, Trading Economics, Fortune

Share
Reader Support

Keep practical Ecuador coverage free to read.

Reader support helps fund source monitoring, translation, editing, publishing, and national coverage for expats across Ecuador.

Advertisement

EcuaPass

Your Ecuador Visa, Done Right

Retirement • Professional • Investor • Cedula processing & renewals — start to finish by licensed experts.

Get a Free Consultation

ecuapass.com

Daily Ecuador News

The stories that matter for expats in Ecuador, delivered daily. No spam — unsubscribe anytime.

Join expats across Ecuador. We respect your privacy.

Need help with your Ecuador visa? EcuaPass handles the paperwork for you. Learn more →

Comments

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!